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After Nvidia, copper prices rise on increased risk appetite

After Nvidia, copper prices rise on increased risk appetite

The copper price edged up on Thursday. This was supported by the weaker dollar, and an increased appetite for risky investments after Nvidia's results reassured the markets about AI boom.

The benchmark three-month copper price on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.3% in open-outcry official trading to $9,789 per metric ton after falling 0.8% the previous session.

LME copper has gained 11% in this year but has been stuck in a range of $9,500 to $9,900 since early July, when it failed to break through the $10,000 barrier.

Ole Hansen is the head of commodity strategy for Saxo Bank, Copenhagen. He said: "Metals are currently in a holding pattern, but today's main driver is probably heightened risk appetite after the Nvidia announcement last night."

It highlights the impact of the AI craze on the market, and the wider appetite for investment.

European and Chinese stocks rose, in part because Nvidia’s strong results eased concerns about a cooling of artificial intelligence demand.

The market also benefited from a weaker US dollar, as traders increased their bets on the Federal Reserve of the United States cutting interest rates next month.

Dollar-priced goods are cheaper for foreign buyers when the dollar is weaker.

The market was weighed down by rising inventories, particularly on the U.S. Comex. The price of copper has nearly tripled in the first half of this year. Copper poured into the U.S. in large quantities before the announcement last month of 50% tariffs on copper.

Hansen stated that there is a large overhang of supplies in the U.S. It really depends on if the demand outside the U.S. will be strong enough to cause this to begin to shift.

LME copper inventories Data released on Thursday added an additional 1,850 tonnes to the three-month record of 157.950 tons.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract eased by 0.5%, to 78.930 yuan (11,034.69) per ton.

Other metals such as LME aluminium, zinc, lead, and nickel all saw increases in official activity. Nickel rose by 0.4%, while tin increased by 0.4%.

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(source: Reuters)